Scannable virtual rail ring oscillator circuit and system for measuring variations in device characteristics

ABSTRACT

A scannable virtual rail ring oscillator circuit and system for measuring variations in device characteristics provides the ability to study random device characteristic variation as well as systematic differences between N-channel and P-channel devices using a ring oscillator frequency measurement. The ring oscillator is operated from at least one virtual power supply rail that is connected to the actual power supply rail by a plurality of transistors controlled by a programmable source. The transistors are physically distributed along the physical distribution of the ring oscillator elements and each can be enabled in turn and the variation in ring oscillator frequency measured. The ring oscillator frequency measurements yield information about the variation between the transistors and N-channel vs. P-channel variation can be studied by employing positive and negative virtual power supply rails with corresponding P-channel and N-channel control transistors.

The Present Application is a Continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/673,025, filed on Feb. 9, 2007, and claims the benefit of priority therefrom under 35 U.S.C. § 120.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention is related to integrated circuit characterization methods and circuits, and more particularly to a circuit and method for measuring variations in device characteristics in a test integrated circuit.

2. Description of Related Art

Characterization integrated circuits are in common use to evaluate designs on processes and have become increasingly necessary as processes have shrunk. Ring oscillator circuits are frequently used in such designs to study device characteristic variations that lead to variations in circuit parameters such as delay time. Performance screen ring oscillators (PSROs) are implemented along with functional circuits in a production integrated circuit to assist in production screening and as a design/process improvement tool. Since it is relatively easy to accurately measure the output frequency of a ring oscillator, and the output frequency is typically directly related to delay time, frequency measurements provide a effective means for studying process and design effects on delay time.

However, ring oscillator test circuits typically do not provide information about random local variation of device characteristics, nor of the systematic and variational differences between the P-channel devices and N-channel devices. Since the frequency of oscillation of the ring oscillator is dependent on the aggregate delay around the ring, a ring oscillator test typically yields only oscillator-to-oscillator variation information, which may be die-to-die or among multiple ring oscillators on a die. There is no measurement of local variation within the ring oscillator itself.

Therefore, it would be desirable to provide a characterization method and ring oscillator circuit for determining device characteristic variation within the ring oscillator and between P-channel and N-channel devices within the ring oscillator, so that local random variation, systematic deviation and N-channel to P-channel skew can be measured.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The above objectives of measuring local random, systematic and P-channel to N-channel variations in device characteristics is achieved in a ring oscillator circuit and method.

The ring oscillator is operated from at least one virtual power supply rail that is connected to the actual power supply rail by a plurality of header transistors that are physically distributed along the path of and in proximity to ring oscillator stages. However, there may be any number of ring oscillator stage and header transistors, so there is no particular correspondence required. The gates of the transistors are controlled by a set of programmable elements, such as a scan latch, so that each transistor may be independently enabled. By selecting each transistor in turn, the variation among the transistors can be measured by the impact on the frequency of the ring oscillator. Two virtual supply rails may be employed (e.g., virtual V_(DD) and virtual ground), with a P-channel plurality of transistors coupling the higher voltage power supply rail and an N-channel plurality of transistors coupling the lower voltage power supply rail, so that the variation in ring oscillator frequency can be studied with one transistor enabled on one virtual power supply rail, while multiple transistors are enabled on the other virtual power supply rail.

In one embodiment, the programmable elements are commonly connected to the gates of the P-channel header transistors and the N-channel footer transistors, so that one transistor is enabled on a first virtual power supply rail and all but one transistor is enabled on the second virtual power supply rail. In another embodiment, a programmable element is provided for each controlled transistor, so that all transistors may be enabled on one virtual power supply rail and each individual transistor scanned on the other virtual power supply rail.

The programmable elements may also be configured as a ring (or two rings for the independent power supply rail control embodiment) so that the bit enabling individual transistor may be rotated through the scan chain under control of the scan clock, rather than requiring a complete boundary scan to enable each individual transistor.

The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following, more particular, description of the preferred embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram depicting a test circuit according to a embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram depicting a test circuit according to another embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 3 is a graph depicting measurement results of a test methodology in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 4 is a pictorial diagram of a circuit layout in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.

FIG. 5 is a block diagram of a wafer test system that may be used to perform tests using methods and circuits in accordance with embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 6 is a flow chart of a method in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

The present invention relates to a characterization circuit and method performed using a ring oscillator circuit in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. The ring oscillator has at least one virtual power supply rail that is coupled to a power supply by a plurality of transistors that are physically distributed along the layout of the ring oscillator stages. By enabling each transistor in turn, while disabling the others, the variation of device characteristics, such as threshold voltage and/or channel resistance of the transistors can be observed from changes in the output frequency of the ring oscillator. The method may be a computer-controlled method partially embodied in a computer program having program instructions for carrying out the method by controlling a die/wafer tester to set the state of the virtual power supply rail transistors. Two virtual power supply rails, a higher voltage (e.g., V_(DD)) and a lower voltage (e.g., ground) can be provided to the ring oscillator and used to observe differences between the N-channel and P-channel device characteristic variations in the test circuit. The gates of each of the pluralities of transistors can be controlled by boundary scan latches, which may be scanned to advance the position of the bit enabling each transistor in turn. The plurality of transistors that couple the second virtual power supply rail opposite the transistors under test may either be all enabled, or if a common control signal is used for each position, all transistors except the transistor that is coupled to the second power supply rail and corresponding in position to the transistor being measured are enabled.

Referring now to FIG. 1, a ring oscillator test circuit in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is shown. In the depicted embodiment, the ring oscillator is formed by a plurality of inverters I1-IK that are physically distributed in a die or wafer kerf circuit and provide the ring oscillator elements. A plurality of P-channel transistors P1-PM couple a higher voltage power supply rail VDD to a virtual power supply rail VRP of inverters I1-IK and are controlled by the bit outputs of a scan latch 10. A second plurality of N-channel transistors N1-NM couple a virtual lower voltage (ground) power supply rail to a virtual power supply rail VRG of inverters I1-IK and are also controlled by the bit outputs of scan latch 10. The number of ring oscillator stages K and the number of test transistors M on each rail are independent. However, transistors N1-NM and P1-PM should be distributed physically along the layout of the ring oscillator stages (inverters I1-IK in the exemplary embodiment). A selector 12A is controlled by a scan enable signal Scan En under tester control to receive an input bit sequence from input signal Scan In when scan latch 10 is being programmed, or to receive feedback from output signal Scan Out in response to a clock signal CLK, that rotates the bit positions of the sequence loaded into scan latch 10 during testing. A selector 12B provides for selection between the scan clock signal Scan Clk that loads values into scan latch 10 and a clock signal CLK, which is pulsed between each frequency measurement.

To study variations in transistors P1-PM a sequence of “1” bits with a leading zero “0” are loaded into scan latch 10 and the frequency of the ring oscillator output signal Freq is measured and stored by a tester. The device characteristics of transistor P1 are strongly indicated in the measured frequency, as transistor P1 is enabled, while transistors P2-PM are disabled. In the depicted configuration, transistor N1 will be disabled, while transistors N2-NM are enabled. The impact of transistor N1 being disabled is generally negligible, since a large number of transistors N2-NM are enabled. However, the wire capacitance of the virtual ground rail VRG should be made sufficiently high and the wire resistance made sufficiently low to avoid local AC effects.

In order to observe the random device characteristic variation across the test circuit, the “enable” bit position is shifted around scan latch 10 and the frequency measurement repeated as each of transistors P2-PM is individually enabled by the progress of the preset “0” bit value through scan latch 10 as clocked by clock signal CLK. After the P-channel characteristics have been determined, another bit pattern may be loaded into scan latch 10: a sequence of zero “0” bits with a leading “1”. This second sequence enables only one of N-channel transistors N1-NM as it is rotated through scan latch, and provides for measurement of the individual device characteristics of transistors N1-NM as reflected in the ring oscillator output frequency, while all but a corresponding one of transistors P1-PM are enabled. The second bit pattern is then shifted to measure the characteristics of transistors N2-NM as was performed for the P-channel measurements described above. While the depicted arrangement for clocking the enable bit positions through scan latch 10 provides for reduced test time since the bit pattern does not have to be scanned in for each measurement, it is understood that selectors 12A and 12B are not required and that the control signals provided to the gates of transistors P1-PM and N1-NM can alternatively be scanned in for each measurement, or may be provided by some other means such as a parallel programmed register.

After the individual devices (transistors P1-PM and transistor N1-NM) have been characterized by the ring oscillator frequency tests, the frequency variation of the ring oscillator can be mapped to threshold voltage variation by selecting the transistor corresponding to the mean-valued frequency from each test (N-channel and P-channel), sweeping the gate voltage of the mean-valued transistor and measuring the ring oscillator frequency variation versus applied gate voltage. For this purpose, scan latch 10 may be provided with power supply inputs VDT and VGT that may be provided through a tester pad and swept, so that the gate voltages of transistors P1-PM and transistor N1-NM can be swept. The only gate that must be swept is the gate of the solitary enabled transistor, and therefore upon selecting the mean-valued P-channel transistor, VGT is swept, with all other P-channel transistor gates held at the ordinary drain voltage (VDD) and upon selecting the mean-valued N-channel transistor, VDT is swept, with the other N-channel transistor gates held at ground. As an alternative, individual selector can be provided at the gates of transistors P1-PM and N1-NM with a scan latch or other mechanism for providing the selection signal. The selector inputs include a pad for the application of VGT or VDT and the corresponding output of scan latch 10 is provided to the other selector input at each device.

Referring now to FIG. 2, a ring oscillator test circuit in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention is shown. The depicted circuit is similar and is operated in a manner similar to the test circuit of FIG. 1, so only difference between them are described in detail below. In the circuit of FIG. 2 a sequence can be loaded into scan latches 10A and 10B, which enables all of the transistors coupling the virtual power supply rail opposite the transistor being studied. Following the sequence of the tests described above, scan latch 10A is loaded with a sequence of “1” bits with a leading zero “0”, which is preceded by a sequence of all “1” bits to fill scan latch 10B to enable all of transistors N1-NM. After all of the P-channel transistors P1-PM are evaluated, scan latch 10B is loaded with a sequence of “0” bits with a leading zero “1”, which is followed by a sequence of all “0” bits to fill scan latch 10A enabling all of transistors P1-PM. An additional selector 12C is provided for local feedback around scan latch 12C, so that the bit position enabling each of transistors N1-NM can be shifted and leading positions properly filled. Optional logical AND gate AND1 can be provided to disable the ring oscillator by breaking the feedback path when the enable signal RO Enable is de-asserted. Multiple ring oscillators and virtual power supply rail transistor sets can then be connected to the outputs of scan latches 10A-10B, so that multiple ring oscillators can be operated from the same scanning mechanism. For the application of VGT and VDT as described above, VGT is provided to scan latch 10A and VDT is provided to scan latch 10B. Individual gate signal selectors can be used as an alternative for gate voltage sweeping, as described above with reference to FIG. 1.

Referring now to FIG. 3, a graph is shown depicting results of a measurement as may be made and displayed by a computer system performing measurement methods in accordance with embodiment of the present invention. The horizontal axis corresponds to a normalized ring oscillator frequency and the vertical axis to the frequency of occurrence of a particular normalized ring oscillator frequency. As shown, two distinct peaks are present in the distribution that correspond to the P-channel and N-channel characteristics. The difference between the peak positions is a measure of the nominal skew between the P-channel and N-channel device characteristics, while the shape and width of each lobe shows the deviation of the random variation of P-channel and N-channel characteristics from their nominal values, respectively. The depicted graph can be compared to results from other dies and standard values for process/part screening and for design information.

Referring now to FIG. 4, a layout that may be employed for the circuits of FIG. 1 and FIG. 2 is shown in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention. The circuit is laid out as a set of concentric rings, the outermost and innermost of which are the power supply rails, VDD and GND, respectively. The N-channel FET footers N1-NM that couple ground rail GND to negative virtual supply rail VRG are disposed around the ground ring and the ring oscillator itself, implemented by inverters I1-IK. Outside of the ring oscillator is a ring including P-channel header transistors P1-PM, which couple the ring oscillator to the outside VDD power supply rail. The above-described layout provides a pattern that can be replicated multiple times on a die, is scalable and ensures that each P-channel header and N-channel footer FETs (P1-PM and N1-NM) are placed symmetrically on the virtual power supply rail rings.

Referring now to FIG. 5, a wafer test system in which a method according to an embodiment of the invention is performed, is shown. A wafer tester 30 includes a boundary scan unit 31 for providing stimulus to a die or kerf circuit 32A on a wafer under test 32, via a probe head 33 having electrical test connections to die/kerf circuit 32A. Wafer tester 30 also includes a programmable voltage supply 42, which may be used to vary the supply voltage provided to the test circuits of the present invention and is die/kerf circuit 32A via probe head 33. A frequency counter 40 is provided to measure the frequency of the one or more ring oscillators included in die/kerf circuit 32A.

A workstation computer 38, having a processor 36 coupled to a memory 37, for executing program instructions from memory 37, wherein the program instructions include program instructions for executing one or more methods in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, is coupled to wafer tester 30, whereby the measurements described above are performed and measurements collected and stored in memory 37 and/or other media storage such as a hard disk. A CD-ROM drive 35 provides for import of program instructions in accordance with embodiments of the present invention that are stored on media such as compact disc CD. Workstation computer 38 is also coupled to a graphical display 39 for displaying program output such as distributions of the ring oscillator frequencies provided by embodiments of the present invention as exemplified by that illustrated in FIG. 3. Workstation computer 38 is further coupled to input devices such as a mouse 34B and a keyboard 34A for receiving user input. Workstation computer may be coupled to a public network such as the Internet, or may be a private network such as the various “intra-nets” and software containing program instructions embodying methods in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may be located on remote computers or locally within workstation computer 38. Further, workstation computer 38 may be coupled to wafer tester 30 by such a network connection.

While the system of FIG. 3 depicts a configuration suitable for sequential test of a plurality of dies on a wafer, the depicted system is illustrative and not a limitation of the present invention. Probe head 33 may be a multi-die full wafer probe system, or may comprise multiple probe heads for simultaneously testing multiple wafers on a single or multiple die basis. Additionally, while boundary scan control of the ring oscillator header transistors is illustrated, the techniques of the present invention may also be applied to execution of test code from a processor incorporated on wafer 32 with appropriate interface to registers or scan latches to control the header transistors, as well. The resultant generated display or data exported from workstation computer 38 may take the form of graphical depictions of the ring oscillator frequencies, or may other graphical or numerical information that describes the transistor characteristics and their variation across the circuit.

Referring now to FIG. 6, a method in accordance with an embodiment of the invention is depicted in a flowchart. The illustrated method is that described with respect to the circuit of FIG. 2, but it is understood that with the exception of the single opposing rail transistor that is disabled in the circuit of FIG. 1 and the particulars of the scan latches, the operation is the same. The first header transistor is enabled and all of the footer transistors, while the remaining header transistors are disabled (step 50) and the ring oscillator frequency is measured and stored (step 51). Until the last header is scanned (decision 53), the enable bit is shifted to the next header transistor (step 52). After the last header transistor is scanned (decision 53), the variation of P-FET strengths are determined from the spread of frequency measurements (step 54). Next, all of the header transistors are enabled and all of the footers disabled, except the first footer, which is enabled (step 55) and the ring oscillator frequency is measured and stored (step 56). Until the last footer is scanned (decision 57), the enable bit is shifted to the next footer transistor (step 58). After the last footer transistor is scanned (decision 57), the variation of N-FET strengths are determined from the spread of frequency measurements (step 59). Finally, the N-channel to P-channel device strength/frequency measurement skew are determined from the measured frequencies (step 60) and the N-channel and P-channel mean frequency measurements are compared with baseline data (and any data gathered from other ring oscillators on the die) to reveal systematic variation (step 61).

While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the foregoing and other changes in form, and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. 

1. A ring oscillator test circuit, comprising: a plurality of cascaded ring oscillator stages forming a ring oscillator having a frequency test output; a first plurality of programmable elements for storing a plurality of control values; and a first plurality of transistors having a channel connection commonly connected to a first power supply rail, a second channel connection commonly connected to a first virtual power supply rail conducting operating power supply current to/from said plurality of cascaded ring oscillator stages, and a gate connection connected to a corresponding one of said first plurality of programmable elements, whereby said plurality of transistors can be selectively enabled according to said control values, so that an impact of variation of device characteristics of said plurality of transistors can be measured at said frequency test output of said ring oscillator by changing said control values.
 2. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 1, wherein said plurality of programmable elements is a scan latch.
 3. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 2, wherein said scan latch incorporates a feedback path that is selectively enabled to sequentially enable each one of said plurality of transistors in response to a clock signal.
 4. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 1, further comprising a second plurality of transistors, of doping type differing from that of said first plurality of transistors, and having a channel connection commonly connected to a second power supply rail, a second channel connection commonly connected to a second virtual power supply rail conducting operating power supply current from/to said plurality of cascaded ring oscillator stages, and a gate connection connected to a corresponding one of said first plurality of programmable elements, whereby when each of said first plurality of transistors is independently enabled all but one of said second plurality of transistor is also enabled.
 5. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 1, further comprising: a second plurality of programmable elements for storing a second plurality of control values; and a second plurality of transistors having a channel connection commonly connected to a second power supply rail, a second channel connection commonly connected to a second virtual power supply rail conducting operating power supply current from/to said plurality of cascaded ring oscillator stages, and a gate connection connected to a corresponding one of said second plurality of programmable elements, whereby when each of said first plurality of transistors is independently enabled any number of said second plurality of transistor can also be enabled.
 6. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 5, wherein said ring oscillator test circuit is incorporated on a die in a concentric layout such that, said plurality of cascaded ring oscillator stages form a ring around a central region of said layout, wherein said central region distributes said first power supply rail, wherein said first plurality of transistors is distributed between said central region and said first plurality of transistors, wherein said second power supply rail is distributed around a periphery of said layout, and wherein said second plurality of transistors is distributed between said plurality of said cascaded ring oscillator stages and said periphery of said layout.
 7. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 1, wherein said ring oscillator test circuit is incorporated on a die in a concentric layout such that, said plurality of cascaded ring oscillator stages form a ring around a central region of said layout, wherein said central region distributes said first power supply rail, and wherein said first plurality of transistors is distributed between said central region and said first plurality of transistors.
 8. The ring oscillator test circuit of claim 1, wherein said cascaded ring oscillator stages are inverters.
 9. A test workstation computer system including a memory for storing data and program instructions for measuring variations in device characteristics in a test circuit on a wafer, a processor for executing said program instructions, and an interface to said test circuit, wherein said program instructions comprise program instructions for: controlling said interface to set a state of programmable elements within said test circuit that control a plurality of transistors that connect a virtual power supply rail of a ring oscillator to a power supply rail; capturing a measured oscillation frequency of said ring oscillator circuit; repeating said program instructions for controlling and capturing to obtain a set of oscillation frequency measurements; and generating results in conformity with said set of oscillation frequency measurements and storing said results in said memory, whereby variation of characteristics of said plurality of transistors is revealed.
 10. The computer program product of claim 21, wherein said controlling comprises: setting a state of boundary scan latches by clocking in a bit sequence that enables only one of said plurality of transistors; and clocking said boundary scan latches so that said bit sequence is shifted to sequentially enable each of said plurality of transistors in turn, and wherein said capturing is repeated for each position of said bit sequence.
 11. The test workstation computer system of claim 21, wherein said controlling sets a state of programmable elements within said test circuit that further controls a second plurality of transistors that connect a second virtual power supply rail of a ring oscillator to a second power supply rail.
 12. The test workstation computer system of claim 21, wherein said controlling enables each of said first plurality of transistors individually in sequence, so that said captured oscillation frequency measurements reflect characteristics of corresponding devices.
 13. The test workstation computer of claim 24, further comprising program instructions for determining a width of a distribution of said captured oscillation frequency, whereby a magnitude of random variation of device characteristics of said first plurality of transistors can be determined.
 14. A computer program product comprising a storage media encoding program instructions for measuring device characteristic variation within a test circuit for execution by a test workstation computer system coupled to an interface of said test circuit, wherein said program instructions comprise program instructions for: controlling said interface to set a state of programmable elements within said test circuit that control a plurality of transistors that connect a virtual power supply rail of a ring oscillator to a power supply rail; capturing a measured oscillation frequency of said ring oscillator circuit; repeating said program instructions for controlling and capturing to obtain a set of oscillation frequency measurements; and generating results in conformity with said set of oscillation frequency measurements and storing said results in a memory of said test workstation computer system, whereby variation of characteristics of said plurality of transistors is revealed.
 15. The computer program product of claim 26, wherein said program instructions for controlling comprises program instructions for: setting a state of boundary scan latches by clocking in a bit sequence that enables only one of said plurality of transistors; and clocking said boundary scan latches so that said bit sequence is shifted to sequentially enable each of said plurality of transistors in turn, and wherein said capturing is repeated for each position of said bit sequence.
 16. The computer program product of claim 26, wherein said program instructions for controlling set a state of programmable elements within said test circuit that further controls a second plurality of transistors that connect a second virtual power supply rail of a ring oscillator to a second power supply rail.
 17. The computer program product of claim 26, wherein said program instructions for controlling enable each of said first plurality of transistors individually in sequence, so that said captured oscillation frequency measurements reflect characteristics of corresponding devices.
 18. The computer program product of claim 29, further comprising program instructions for determining a width of a distribution of said captured oscillation frequency, whereby a magnitude of random variation of device characteristics of said first plurality of transistors can be determined. 